New tenants for revamped Huntington Shopping Center

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The Container Store is one of several new tenants coming to the redeveloped Huntington Shopping Center in Huntington Station. 

The storage and home organization retailer leased a 15,676-square-foot space at the 21-acre shopping center on Route 110, joining a growing tenant roster that includes a 43,609-square-foot Whole Foods store and a 21,226-square-foot REI store. 

The owner of the center, publicly traded Federal Realty Investment Trust, is in the midst of its $75 million redevelopment of the property, which will expand the leasing space to 277,000 square feet. 

Federal Realty has also signed three new tenants for one of the center’s new 8,000-square-foot pad sites. Those include Burger Village, which leased 2,756 square feet; Just Salad, which leased 2,382 square feet and furniture retailer Love Sac, which will be opening a 1,412-square-foot showroom. A 1,407-square-foot space at the first pad site is still available, according to Federal Realty. 

“The transformation of Huntington Shopping Center continues to draw premier brands that, together, create a must-visit retail destination,” Mark Brennan, vice president of regional development at Federal Realty, said in a company statement. “With the addition of some of the region’s most desirable retail, food and beverage concepts, we believe the property will deliver what the community needs and wants.” 

The stores that are currently open at the Huntington Shopping Center include PetSmart, ULTA, Tilly’s, Michaels, and Vision Works. 

The redevelopment project is expected to be completed next year. 

Raj Whadwa of Global Realty Services represented Burger Village, Eric Gillman and Adam Bass of CBRE represented Just Salad, and Michael Friedman of Inline Realty represented Love Sac, while Joe Byrnes served as in-house representative for Federal Realty in the lease transactions. 

Byrnes and his Federal Realty colleague Lance Billingsley brokered the lease for The Container Store. 



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Image and article originally from libn.com. Read the original article here.